Jim Hunt As Chancellor? Not On My Watch!

Today’s Triangle Business Journal features NC State “booster” Steve Stroud doing a little “boosting” for someone else: former four-term governor Jim Hunt.

Stroud, it seems, thinks Hunt would be a dandy occupant for the vacant chancellor’s chair at NC State: “Jim Hunt would do a great job bringing the university back together.” In fact, says Stroud, it’s “absolutely logical” to put Hunt in the chancellor’s office.

Sorry, Mr. Stroud: Jim Hunt as chancellor would be perhaps the worst possible choice for NC State as it cleans house in the wake of a disastrous political patronage hiring scandal.

Jim Hunt as governor ran a political patronage machine that permeated every corner of state government. Key “patronage persons,” with approval or disapproval rights over hiring decisions made by managers and personnel professionals, were sown throughout the state government structure. At Broughton Hospital in Morganton, for example, the “patronage person” during the Hunt years was – a barber. That’s right: if you wanted to hire someone at one of the state’s largest mental health institutions, you cleared it with the barber.

That was state government under Jim Hunt. And it’s exactly what we don’t need at NC State.

The Klown Kar-full of officials exiting the school over the past few weeks – chancellor, provost, board of trustees chair – got the bum’s rush because of precisely the kind of political patronage hiring that was SOP in the Hunt era. Mary Easley, it’s now clear, was placed in her overpaid, cobbled-together sinecure because her hubby the Gov and his pals wanted her there – pure political patronage. No job posting. No interview process. No review of applications. Just a few quiet emails and phone calls, and … presto! Mary Easley’s getting $14,000.00 per month to call up the Washington Speaker’s Bureau and teach a class for which a “colleague” was paid $5,000.00 per year.

And now, out pops Steve Stroud from the smoking ruins of our university’s honor and proposes that the remedy for a ruinous political patronage hiring scandal is: install North Carolina’s king of political patronage hiring as chancellor. It is to laugh, if only the man wasn’t serious.

Restoring integrity to university hiring practices is central to repairing NC State’s reputation both internally and with the public it serves. Assigning Jim Hunt to oversee that process is like assigning Otis the town drunk to fix problems at the ABC store. NC State can, and should, do better than Jim Hunt.

General NC State Administration

33 Responses to Jim Hunt As Chancellor? Not On My Watch!

  1. Cardiff Giant 06/13/2009 at 3:09 PM #

    “To note his “political patronage” is like saying linebackers hit really hard. ALL politicians do this.”

    But Jim Hunt did this more pervasively than any NC politician in living memory. I think he was quite fortunate that the N&O was owned by the Daniels family during his terms in office.

  2. EverettBeez 06/13/2009 at 4:01 PM #

    I don’t agree with Jim Hunt on most political issues, but I do respect his love for NC, and how hard he worked to improve the state. On the whole, I think his 16 years are governor were successful. I don’t recall that he was tarred by any of the Paving Mafia scandals of the era, but I might be mistaken. I think as a whole he’d be an interesting choice as chancellor, he’s a proven administrator, with the kind of national reputation and connections that are beneficial in that sort of a position.
    Not my first choice, but as Noah said, worst choice? lol, get real.

  3. 61Packer 06/13/2009 at 7:38 PM #

    One thing that’s almost a certainty in North Carolina state government and especially in the UNC system is this: regardless of who becomes the new chancellor at NCSU, that person will be paid more than the person they replaced. Budget crisis? Money shortage? NOT IN THE UNC SYSTEM!

    If NCSU administrators indeed want Jim Hunt for this position, they’ll give him a king’s ransom and then brag about how brilliant a choice this was. Hopefully, NC taxpayers, especially those who have been laid off by NCSU and those who will probably follow, will understand that their financial sacrifices were in the best interests of this great University.

    In the coming weeks, it’s a slam dunk that our State Legislature is going to raise our taxes, despite our state being mired in a deep recession. Lawmakers will MAKE SURE that there’s not going to be a money shortage when it comes to public education, the North Carolina State Legislature’s fattest and most sacred cow of all.

    Gotta, needa, wanta……………….

  4. Alpha Wolf 06/14/2009 at 8:00 AM #

    If one wants to clean up NC State’s and the UNC system’s reputation in the wake of this scandal, they bring in an outsider with a record and reputation of being a straight-arrow who has a track record of success when it comes to managing the multi-billion dollar enterprise that is NC State.

    Right now, State is in the same league as a Tyco — a firm whose management enriched themselves at the expense of the stockholders and without the knowledge of its board. The KEY difference here is that former CEO Dennis Kozlowski and CFO Marc Swartz went to prison. Edward Breen, a Motorola executive known as a reformer and straigh-shooter was brought in and began changing the culture of the company — especially at the top, where Tyco was treated as a Good Ole Boy’s Club with an open bank vault. The company mantra was “ethics” and “doing the right thing.” NOT doing the right thing — from top to bottom — was backed by dismissal, no matter the position.

    These changes took a while, but over time the stock market noticed and began to award to company through higher prices. At first, it didn’t look like Breen was doing well because he reported real financial results rather than numbers that were obfuscated in order to make things look right.

    Now, Tyco is among the corporate world’s better citizens. That’s thanks to Ed Breen, and the sea change he brought that former scofflaw company.

    And THAT is the kind of guy NC State needs, not someone who has no experience running a university but loves NC State, not someone who is a member of the very system that created the mess in the first place and not someone that no matter how good a job he does his past will create questions about the job he does, good or bad, clean or dirty.

  5. highstick 06/14/2009 at 12:00 PM #

    “If one wants to clean up NC State’s and the UNC system’s reputation in the wake of this scandal, they bring in an outsider with a record and reputation of being a straight-arrow who has a track record of success when it comes to managing the multi-billion dollar enterprise that is NC State.”

    Key words, “outsider”, “reputation of being a straight-arrow”, and a “track record of success”!

    Anything else is unacceptable! I hate to use these words, but it’s time for some “real change”!

  6. Oldwolf 06/14/2009 at 5:47 PM #

    Another good NC State alum that would be good choice and he is younger than Jim Hunt — John Edwards – he has a national reputation

    🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

  7. McCallum 06/15/2009 at 10:30 AM #

    NC State is like Tyco.

    And I mean the cheap HO scale train line of Tyco from back in the 70’s and 80’s: shiny, cheap, low input, low return, always letting you down, always coming off the tracks, always redefining itself but most of all CHEAP.

    Just find an old tobacco farmer from Nash County to run the darn place.

    McCallum

  8. tcthdi-tgsf-twhwtnc 06/18/2009 at 10:21 AM #

    I’m getting a good laugh at the idea of James B. Hunt being Chancellor of NC State to ‘clean-up’ the mess. Certainly he has his worshiper but they should remain in his church and not push their religion on everyone else.

    Maybe NC State should look to the mid-majors and try and find an up and coming Chancellor to turn the program around. ;o)

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